no, but the giants just pummeled the detroit pussies [again] ... it would be great to see a sweep, but there's a slim possibility the last fucking game could be played here on halloween, and if you've ever been to sf on halloween, you'd know it goes way beyond bongos in the dirt, & combining halloween with a world series win would detonate a seismic party eruption big enough to set off another 7.1 quake

I can verifiy all of the above to be true.As long as cops don't try and break things up all will be an earth shake,shake,shakin' in party,man.

no, but the giants just pummeled the detroit pussies [again] ... it would be great to see a sweep, but there's a slim possibility the last fucking game could be played here on halloween, and if you've ever been to sf on halloween, you'd know it goes way beyond bongos in the dirt, & combining halloween with a world series win would detonate a seismic party eruption big enough to set off another 7.1 quake

I can verifiy all of the above to be true.As long as cops don't try and break things up all will be an earth shake,shake,shakin' in party,man.

I had forgotten about this thread! So, by way of updating my son's baseball status, things are good. Last summer he was recruited by several schools, and committed to pitch at Western Illinois University, a Division I school. He also got a healthy scholarship (that's good for me!). He's a senior now and feeling pretty good about himself overall. In his high school league, he's got a .075 ERA and averages 10 strikeouts per game.

Sometimes, life is just simple and good.......

Here he is in action......

_________________Everytime we picked a booger we'd flip it on this one winduh. Every night we'd contribute, 2, 3, 4 boogers. We had to use a putty knife, man, to get them damn things off the winduh. There was some goober ones that weren't even hard...

Current ERA is .075. He has an average speed fastball at 88mph, but it has a lot of natural movement so it's a good pitch for him. What got him recruited was his curve, or should I say curves because he can do almost anything he wants with it. He also has a great slider and change. He's definitely a strikeout/ground ball kind of pitcher. Averages about 10 K a game (7 innings). Last year, he went 11-0 for the season. The season before that he went 0-11, and this year he's 3-2 so far. The team is pretty bad in general. The usual scenario is he pitches a gem but the team commits several errors in each game and couldn't score to save their lives! Sometimes he grows weary of carrying the team on his back......

He doesn't follow MLB much, but he can tell you anything you want to know about college baseball. None of us are naive enough to think he could get drafted by the pros; too many things have to fall together just perfectly for that to happen. He's happy playing D1 and getting an education.

He's currently slumping at the plate, but he's a hitter so he'll bounce back. Last year he led the team with a .418 average.

Thanks for the interest KK!

_________________Everytime we picked a booger we'd flip it on this one winduh. Every night we'd contribute, 2, 3, 4 boogers. We had to use a putty knife, man, to get them damn things off the winduh. There was some goober ones that weren't even hard...

I was a right fielder at 7 then went to a pitcher up until 14-15yrs old. Moms would save the little league stats and clippings. A typical one would read that I hit a grand slam in a losing effort to Whitecliff Roofing or I pitched the 1st no-hitter of the season while on the last place team, Lutz Ford. Stuff like that. Funny now, but I wished I had stayed with it longer. Back in my day there was the jocks and then the rest of us. They didn't know what to think of a longhaired "Monster On The Mound" as I was referred to in '64. A few would call me a girl and I'd let a "wild pitch" sail at their freakin' heads. That stopped that shit real quick! I was the go to guy for the LL Major's when they needed to round out a roster or forfeit the game when I was an Intermediate League player. The first year I played I had one hit, stole second and was thrown out trying for third. It's amazing I went back. I'm glad I did, I found out I could hit and led the league in HR's and RBI's that next year and repeated that same feat my last year. Baseballs a very cool sport! It sounds like yer kids got his head on straight about the game. The naturally best kids don't take themselves too seriously and therefor have more fun. When it becomes a job that doesn't pay, is when ya start to loose interest.I hope your young man stays healthy and takes care of that arm, it might be golden later on in life. Ya never know! EDIT: In '67 I bought AB and became a ZappaFreak!

Those are pretty impressive numbers RN (you too KK). Getting his education is the important thing but I would think as a D1 recruit the possibility of getting drafted is not totally out of the question. Personally, I had a hard time making the jump from the Little League mound to the regulation mound. I played baseball through high school and pitched on the jv team. I was so slow the other team used to laugh at me when I was warming up. As slow as I was, my breaking stuff and my control wasn't much better. Not surprisingly, I was a perfect 0 and whatever during my high school career.

Yes, education is the big kahuna. One of the reasons he committed to WIU was the athletic academic program they had to make sure the players stay on top of their off field responsibilities. It's pretty rigorous.

My biggest worry is his arm. Pitching is a very unnatural thing, physically. Career ending arm injuries are really common....

Me? I played grade school level baseball, but didn't play in high school. That was a good decision because I stunk.

_________________Everytime we picked a booger we'd flip it on this one winduh. Every night we'd contribute, 2, 3, 4 boogers. We had to use a putty knife, man, to get them damn things off the winduh. There was some goober ones that weren't even hard...

My biggest worry is his arm. Pitching is a very unnatural thing, physically. Career ending arm injuries are really common....

Your right to worry, I read recently that the Tommy John types of surgery and rehap has become the norm for pitchers ever since Tommy John had the first surgery of that kind and it worked for him. They don't stress enough to the young players that it doesn't always work and sometimes does more harm than good to a young arm. Just "get 'er done" is their mantra.

Sam (my son) had arm troubles early on, pre-high school. He had a well meaning coach who taught him the wrong mechanics of throwing. We got to become good pals with his docs and therapists..... Then, we got him a real pitching coach, who straightened that shit out for him right away, and told him not to throw sliders until his junior year. And now he has a trainer too. I force him to do the routines every day and so far, his arm/shoulder/scaps have stayed strong. Can't stress enough how important it is to have proper mechanics.

I've seen kids under 12 getting TJ surgery, the dads think their kid is going to have a "pro" career. Sort of pathetic.

_________________Everytime we picked a booger we'd flip it on this one winduh. Every night we'd contribute, 2, 3, 4 boogers. We had to use a putty knife, man, to get them damn things off the winduh. There was some goober ones that weren't even hard...

One of my favorite movies growing up was Rookie of the Year with Thomas Ian Nicholas and Gary Busey. There's a hilarious part at the end when the Cubs are playing for the Pennant and John Candy goes on an excited tirade:

"This is it folks! This is for the whole kit and kaboodle, the whole magilla, the whole enchilada, the whole ball of wax, the whole shootin' match! This is for all the marbles!"

_________________Everytime we picked a booger we'd flip it on this one winduh. Every night we'd contribute, 2, 3, 4 boogers. We had to use a putty knife, man, to get them damn things off the winduh. There was some goober ones that weren't even hard...

The widespread rioting that enveloped Baltimore on Monday night and kept the city on edge Tuesday has created an oddity that, to be sure, is frivolous given the chaos but could serve as one of the enduring symbols that absolutely nothing was normal this week. On Wednesday afternoon at Camden Yards, the Baltimore Orioles will host the Chicago White Sox in a regular-season baseball game between two clubs hoping to reach the playoffs, and no fans will be allowed in the park.

Moreover, the Orioles’ scheduled home series this weekend against the Tampa Bay Rays has been moved to St. Petersburg, Fla. – where the Orioles will serve as the home team.

The unusual decisions come as the Orioles worked with police and other local authorities, officials from Major League Baseball, the White Sox and Rays on how to best schedule games around the 10 p.m. curfew that was scheduled to begin Tuesday and remain in place through the beginning of next week. Four of those games were slated for first pitch at 7:05 p.m., and given that an average major league game lasts close to three hours, fans couldn’t have hoped to take in the entire game and make it home in time.

Scherzer was one strike from a perfect game, one start after he had fired a 16-strikeout, one-hit shutout. Scherzer became the 13th pitcher in major league history to lose a perfect game with two outs in the ninth inning, and the first pitcher since Kevin Brown in 1997 to throw a no-hitter in which the only baserunner reached via a hit by pitch. He's given up only one hit (a bloop single) in the last 18 innings pitched. He's the most intense major league pitcher I've seen this season.

Today's game against the Pirates is about to begin, and during the roster announcements, Jose Tabata was greeted with the loudest round of boos ever heard at Nationals Park.

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